An online interactive lecture by Shiqiao Li (Weedon Professor in Asian Architecture School of Architecture, University of Virginia) in the framework of the IIAS/UKNA Asian Cities Presentation Series.


In this lecture, professor Shiqiao Li will argue that the normative methods of urban analysis are too narrow to account for the full realities of cities in Asia. While conceptualizing and guiding the construction of cities in Asia in specific ways, many of these methods simultaneously conceal qualities that do not match the provinces of methods. To frame this problematic, he focuses on three foundational concepts of the city in the Western sense – exclusive land ownership, divisions of labor, and primacy of architecture – by tracing their intellectual trajectories. Against this characterization, he will examine how cities can take shape with a set of divergent concepts that can be characterized by way of ancient and indigenous thoughts in Asia, enabling a meaningful understanding of “the Asian city”. This divergence of urban thoughts not only would allow us to better explain – rather than dismiss – complex urban phenomena in Asian cities, but also offer insights into ways of building cities that aspire to a more viable planetary habitation.